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MONS, Belgium -- The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is managing a major push into upgrading decades-old buildings on the NATO base here as part of an endeavor that will have a lasting impact on the culture and mission of Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, military and education leaders say.
Taking SHAPE: USACE projects key to organization's future
1/29/2013 2:04:59 PM
Jason Cade, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Europe District Leadership Development Program team member delivers an e-lesson on the physics behind roller coaters to a Wiesbaden Middle School eighth-grade class via video conference at the district's headquarters in Wiesbaden, Germany Dec. 19, 2012.
Web conferencing brings Army engineers to DoDDS-Europe physics class
1/11/2013 10:48:04 AM
Chris Strunk, Tulsa District USACE Dam Safety Production Center, Chief of Dam and Levee Design Section confers with members of one of the robotics teams at the Tulsa FIRST LEGO League qualifying event Nov. 10. Strunk participated in the event as a judge and mentor as part of the USACE Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) outreach program.
Tulsa engineers mentor youngsters at robotics competition
12/21/2012 1:41:38 PM
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers St. Louis District began increasing releases from Carlyle Lake, Ill., Dec. 15, 2012, in support of safe navigation on the Mississippi River. Carlyle Lake is a multipurpose project located along the Kaskaskia River in Southern Illinois, providing flood damage reduction, recreation, water supply, downstream navigation and fish and wildlife conservation.
Carlyle Lake
12/18/2012 10:56:19 AM
Detroit firemen checkout a vacant building using MICA software loaded into Android smart phones.
ERDC software aids Detroit fire dept.
12/11/2012 9:06:20 AM
4825 Glenbrook Road is a property that is part of the Spring Valley Formerly Used Defense Site (FUDS), which consists of approximately 661 acres in the northwest section of Washington, D.C. During the World War I-era, the U.S. government used the site, known as the American University Experiment Station, for research and testing of chemical agents, equipment, and munitions. The Corps of Engineers demolished the house Nov. 30 to clean-up and restoration of the site to residential standards.
Corps of Engineers demolishes house in Washington, D.C.
12/10/2012 3:51:58 PM
4825 Glenbrook Road is a property that is part of the Spring Valley Formerly Used Defense Site (FUDS), which consists of approximately 661 acres in the northwest section of Washington, D.C. During the World War I era, the U.S. government used the site, known as the American University Experiment Station, for research and testing of chemical agents, equipment, and munitions. The Corps of Engineers demolished the house Nov. 30 to clean-up and restoration of the site to residential standards.
Corps of Engineers demolishes house in Washington, D.C.
12/10/2012 3:45:22 PM
This photo was taken in 1918. The Soldier wrote this note on the back of the photo: "The Pit, the most feared and respected place in the grounds. The bottles are full of mustard to be destroyed here. In Death Valley. The hole called Hades. You know me?" Signed C.W. Maurer at A.U. The Corps of Engineers has evidence to suggest that the Sgt. Maurer Burial Pit is located on 4825 Glenbrook Road. Additionally, based on past investigative data and removal actions, the site was used for burial operations by the American University Experiment Station for munitions, laboratory glassware, and drums of chemicals. The Corps has discovered items that are consistent with the items pictured in the Sgt. Maurer photo.
Sgt. Maurer Burial Pit
12/10/2012 3:41:12 PM